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Trip the light fantastic

To "trip the light fantastic" is to dance nimbly or lightly to music. The origin of the phrase is attributed to John Milton.[1][2]

History edit

This phrase evolved over time. Its origin is attributed to Milton's 1645 poem L'Allegro,[1][3][4] which includes lines addressed to Euphrosyne—one of the Three Graces of Greek mythology:[5]

Com, and trip it as ye go
On the light fantastick toe,

In Milton's use the word "trip" means to "dance nimbly" and "fantastic" suggests "extremely fancy". "Light fantastic" refers to the word toe, and "toe" refers to a dancer's "footwork". "Toe" has since disappeared from the idiom, which then becomes: "trip the light fantastic".[6] A few years before, in 1637, Milton had used the expression "light fantastic" in reference to dancing in his masque Comus: "Come, knit hands, and beat the ground,/In a light fantastic round."[7]

Prior to Milton, the expression "tripping on his toe" appears in Shakespeare's The Tempest (1610–1611):

Before you can say come, and goe,
And breathe twice; and cry, so, so:
Each one tripping on his Toe,
Will be here with mop, and mowe.

The phrase "He did trip it / On the toe" appears in the Jacobean song "Since Robin Hood", set to music by Thomas Weelkes in 1608.[8]

This expression was popularized in the American song "The Sidewalks of New York" (melody and lyrics by Charles B. Lawlor and James W. Blake) in 1894.[4] Part of the chorus:

Boys and girls together, me and Mamie O'Rourke
Tripped the light fantastic
On the sidewalks of New York.

The phrase occurs in Nella Larsen's 1929 novel, Passing, when the character Hugh Wentworth, while watching black and white men and women dancing together, chats with Irene and says, "Not having tripped the light fantastic with any males, I'm not in a position to argue the point."[9]

Milton, Blake and Michelangelo edit

 
Mirth by William Blake

John Milton's poem L'Allegro (1631) encourages the goddess Mirth/Euphrosyne to "trip it as ye go/On the light fantastick toe", and that poem inspired William Blake to create a watercolor, "Mirth" (1820), which illustrates that moment in Milton's poem. It is thought that Milton's poem may have been inspired by Michelangelo's sculpture of Giuliano de' Medici, which represents vita activa (active life).[10][11][12][5]

Syntactical critique edit

In a discussion of anomalous idiomacies in a paradigm attributed to Noam Chomsky in his book Syntactic Structures, it is suggested that some idioms are not "syntactically well-formed which could not be generated by a base component designed to produce well-formed deep structures". The examples given are the idioms "by and large", "kingdom come", and "trip the light fantastic".[13] The phrase, and other examples, are considered "opaque because it is impossible to construct a meaningful literal-scene from the formal structure. Nevertheless, these idioms can be recognised as complex constructions rather than as holophrastic sequences. One can therefore claim that for these expressions, the literal-scene only exists as a highly schematic mental representation: ... trip the light fantastic is a form of tripping."[14] An idiom is considered opaque when the idiom's individual words do not reveal the meaning of the expression. For example the word "trip" has not retained its former meaning — to "dance nimbly".[15]

Variations and occurrences in popular culture edit

  • A song titled "The Ballet Girl; or She danced on the light fantastic toe", contains the verse "While she danced on her light fantastic toe,/ Round the stage she used to go." It was sung by Tony Pastor at his Bowery opera house, and was then published in 1867.[16]

This is our father who left us a long time ago. He was a telephone man who fell in love with long distances; he gave up his job with the telephone company and skipped the light fantastic out of town . . .[17]

  • The phrase "to trip the light fandango" is used as a phrase for carefree dancing in a Spanish or Latin American fandango style in the 1945 recording of the song "South America", Vitaphone Release 1460A.[citation needed]
  • Chester Himes in 1960 used a variation on the phrase: "Colored boys and girls in ski ensembles and ballet skirts were skating the light fantastic at two o'clock ... "[18]

we skipped the light fandango,
turned cartwheels 'cross the floor.
I was feeling kinda seasick,
but the crowd called out for more…[4]

Trip the light fantastic
Dance the swivel hips
Coming to conclusion
Button up your lips.[20][21]

  • Trip the Light Fantastic is the name of an afternoon show on the Australian radio station 2EARfm.[22][23]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Kirkpatrick, Betty and Kirkpatrick, Elizabeth McLaren (1999) "light fantastic" Clichés: Over 1500 Phrases Explored and Explained Macmillan, New York, page 115, ISBN 978-0-312-19844-2
  2. ^ Jarvie, Gordon (2009) "Trip" Bloomsbury Dictionary of Idioms A & C Black, London, page 652, ISBN 978-1-4081-2492-5
  3. ^ Martin, Gary. "Trip the light fantastic". www.phrases.org.uk.
  4. ^ a b c Smith, Chrysti M. (2006) "Trip the Light Fantastic" Verbivore's Feast: Second Course: More Word & Phrase Origins Farcountry Press, Helena, Montana, page 320, ISBN 978-1-56037-404-6
  5. ^ a b Behrendt, Stephen C. (1975). "Bright Pilgrimage: William Blake's Designs For 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso'". Milton Studies. 8: 123–147. doi:10.2307/26395366. JSTOR 26395366. S2CID 248658163.
  6. ^ Grammarist, "Trip the light fantastic"
  7. ^ Milton, John. Bell, William, ed. Milton's Comus. Macmillan and Co. New York (1891). p. 11, lines 143-144
  8. ^ Ezust, Emily (2009–2014). "Since Robin Hood (Anonymous, set by Thomas Weelkes". The LiederNet Archive. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  9. ^ Larsen, Nella. Passing. Martino Fine Books (2011) first published 1929. p. 60. ISBN 978-1614270003
  10. ^ Revard, Stella. Milton and the Tangles of Neaera's Hair. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1997. P. 96. ISBN 978-0826211002
  11. ^ Revard, Stella P. (1986). "'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso': Classical Tradition and Renaissance Mythography". PMLA. 101 (3): 338–350. doi:10.2307/462419. JSTOR 462419. S2CID 170793447.
  12. ^ Martina, Enna (April 2011). "The Sources and Traditions of Milton's L'Allegro and Il Penseroso : A New Approach". English Studies. 92 (2): 138–173. doi:10.1080/0013838X.2010.536691. S2CID 162256179.
  13. ^ Chafe, Wallace L. (1968). "Idiomaticity as an Anomaly in the Chomskyan Paradigm". Foundations of Language. 4 (2): 109–127. JSTOR 25000002.
  14. ^ Langlotz, Andreas (2006) Idiomatic Creativity: A Cognitive-Linguistic Model of Idiom-Representation and Idiom-Variation in English John Benjamins Publishing Company, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, page 132, ISBN 978-90-272-2370-8
  15. ^ "Idioms". PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching. Volume 12 (1976)
  16. ^ Tony Pastor's 201 Bowery Songster, 1867. New York: Dick & Fitzgerald, p. 9
  17. ^ William, Tennessee. The Glass Menagerie, New Directions (2011) p. 1-3.ISBN 978-0-8112-1894-8
  18. ^ Himes, Chester. All Shot Up. 1960. Pegasus 2007 p. 101. ISBN 978-1933648729
  19. ^ [1] All Musicals lyrics
  20. ^ Admin, Stereo Stories (6 October 2014). "Walking In The Rain by Grace Jones". Stereo Stories. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  21. ^ Fitzsimons, Ross. "Nightclubbing". Hotpress. from the original on 7 June 2021. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  22. ^ Beagle, The (16 August 2020). "Fifty years on: Eric Clapton". The Beagle. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  23. ^ "Programme guide". 2earfm. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  24. ^ Marillion website, "LYRICS - Heart of Lothian"
  25. ^ "Tripping the Light Fantastic - Lit". AllMusic.
  26. ^ Blistein, Jon. "Greta Van Fleet Search for Love Amid War on New Song 'Heat Above'". Rolling Stone online. February 10, 2021.
  27. ^ "Underground". Genius. Retrieved 2 October 2023.

External links edit

  • "Trip the light fantastic" at The Phrase Finder website

trip, light, fantastic, other, uses, trip, light, fantastic, trip, light, fantastic, dance, nimbly, lightly, music, origin, phrase, attributed, john, milton, contents, history, milton, blake, michelangelo, syntactical, critique, variations, occurrences, popula. For other uses see Trip the Light Fantastic To trip the light fantastic is to dance nimbly or lightly to music The origin of the phrase is attributed to John Milton 1 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Milton Blake and Michelangelo 2 Syntactical critique 3 Variations and occurrences in popular culture 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThis phrase evolved over time Its origin is attributed to Milton s 1645 poem L Allegro 1 3 4 which includes lines addressed to Euphrosyne one of the Three Graces of Greek mythology 5 Com and trip it as ye go On the light fantastick toe In Milton s use the word trip means to dance nimbly and fantastic suggests extremely fancy Light fantastic refers to the word toe and toe refers to a dancer s footwork Toe has since disappeared from the idiom which then becomes trip the light fantastic 6 A few years before in 1637 Milton had used the expression light fantastic in reference to dancing in his masque Comus Come knit hands and beat the ground In a light fantastic round 7 Prior to Milton the expression tripping on his toe appears in Shakespeare s The Tempest 1610 1611 Before you can say come and goe And breathe twice and cry so so Each one tripping on his Toe Will be here with mop and mowe The phrase He did trip it On the toe appears in the Jacobean song Since Robin Hood set to music by Thomas Weelkes in 1608 8 This expression was popularized in the American song The Sidewalks of New York melody and lyrics by Charles B Lawlor and James W Blake in 1894 4 Part of the chorus Boys and girls together me and Mamie O Rourke Tripped the light fantastic On the sidewalks of New York The phrase occurs in Nella Larsen s 1929 novel Passing when the character Hugh Wentworth while watching black and white men and women dancing together chats with Irene and says Not having tripped the light fantastic with any males I m not in a position to argue the point 9 Milton Blake and Michelangelo edit nbsp Mirth by William Blake John Milton s poem L Allegro 1631 encourages the goddess Mirth Euphrosyne to trip it as ye go On the light fantastick toe and that poem inspired William Blake to create a watercolor Mirth 1820 which illustrates that moment in Milton s poem It is thought that Milton s poem may have been inspired by Michelangelo s sculpture of Giuliano de Medici which represents vita activa active life 10 11 12 5 Syntactical critique editIn a discussion of anomalous idiomacies in a paradigm attributed to Noam Chomsky in his book Syntactic Structures it is suggested that some idioms are not syntactically well formed which could not be generated by a base component designed to produce well formed deep structures The examples given are the idioms by and large kingdom come and trip the light fantastic 13 The phrase and other examples are considered opaque because it is impossible to construct a meaningful literal scene from the formal structure Nevertheless these idioms can be recognised as complex constructions rather than as holophrastic sequences One can therefore claim that for these expressions the literal scene only exists as a highly schematic mental representation trip the light fantastic is a form of tripping 14 An idiom is considered opaque when the idiom s individual words do not reveal the meaning of the expression For example the word trip has not retained its former meaning to dance nimbly 15 Variations and occurrences in popular culture editA song titled The Ballet Girl or She danced on the light fantastic toe contains the verse While she danced on her light fantastic toe Round the stage she used to go It was sung by Tony Pastor at his Bowery opera house and was then published in 1867 16 In the opening monologue of Tennessee Williams 1944 play The Glass Menagerie the character Tom addresses the audience indicates a photograph and says This is our father who left us a long time ago He was a telephone man who fell in love with long distances he gave up his job with the telephone company and skipped the light fantastic out of town 17 The phrase to trip the light fandango is used as a phrase for carefree dancing in a Spanish or Latin American fandango style in the 1945 recording of the song South America Vitaphone Release 1460A citation needed Chester Himes in 1960 used a variation on the phrase Colored boys and girls in ski ensembles and ballet skirts were skating the light fantastic at two o clock 18 In 1967 the English rock band Procol Harum released its song A Whiter Shade of Pale with lyrics by Keith Reid which includes the phrase we skipped the light fandango turned cartwheels cross the floor I was feeling kinda seasick but the crowd called out for more 4 In 1973 Stephen Sondheim employed two variations of the phrase trip the light fandango and pitch the quick fantastic in the song The Miller s Son from his musical A Little Night Music 19 In 1978 the Australian New Wave project Flash and the Pan released Walking in the Rain which later became a minor hit in the cover version by Grace Jones and included the phrase Trip the light fantastic Dance the swivel hips Coming to conclusion Button up your lips 20 21 Trip the Light Fantastic is the name of an afternoon show on the Australian radio station 2EARfm 22 23 In 1985 rock band Marillion released its song Heart of Lothian which included the line and the trippers of the light fantastic bow down hoe down 24 In 1997 American Rock Band Lit named their first studio album Tripping the Light Fantastic 25 American rock band Greta Van Fleet recorded a song titled Trip the Light Fantastic for their 2021 album The Battle at Garden s Gate 26 The song Underground in the 1995 eponymous debut album Ben Folds Five by alternative rock trio Ben Folds Five is largely about moshing and includes the lyric Slamming the pit fantastic 27 References edit a b Kirkpatrick Betty and Kirkpatrick Elizabeth McLaren 1999 light fantastic Cliches Over 1500 Phrases Explored and Explained Macmillan New York page 115 ISBN 978 0 312 19844 2 Jarvie Gordon 2009 Trip Bloomsbury Dictionary of Idioms A amp C Black London page 652 ISBN 978 1 4081 2492 5 Martin Gary Trip the light fantastic www phrases org uk a b c Smith Chrysti M 2006 Trip the Light Fantastic Verbivore s Feast Second Course More Word amp Phrase Origins Farcountry Press Helena Montana page 320 ISBN 978 1 56037 404 6 a b Behrendt Stephen C 1975 Bright Pilgrimage William Blake s Designs For L Allegro and Il Penseroso Milton Studies 8 123 147 doi 10 2307 26395366 JSTOR 26395366 S2CID 248658163 Grammarist Trip the light fantastic Milton John Bell William ed Milton s Comus Macmillan and Co New York 1891 p 11 lines 143 144 Ezust Emily 2009 2014 Since Robin Hood Anonymous set by Thomas Weelkes The LiederNet Archive Retrieved 17 January 2019 Larsen Nella Passing Martino Fine Books 2011 first published 1929 p 60 ISBN 978 1614270003 Revard Stella Milton and the Tangles of Neaera s Hair Columbia University of Missouri Press 1997 P 96 ISBN 978 0826211002 Revard Stella P 1986 L Allegro and Il Penseroso Classical Tradition and Renaissance Mythography PMLA 101 3 338 350 doi 10 2307 462419 JSTOR 462419 S2CID 170793447 Martina Enna April 2011 The Sources and Traditions of Milton s L Allegro and Il Penseroso A New Approach English Studies 92 2 138 173 doi 10 1080 0013838X 2010 536691 S2CID 162256179 Chafe Wallace L 1968 Idiomaticity as an Anomaly in the Chomskyan Paradigm Foundations of Language 4 2 109 127 JSTOR 25000002 Langlotz Andreas 2006 Idiomatic Creativity A Cognitive Linguistic Model of Idiom Representation and Idiom Variation in English John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam the Netherlands page 132 ISBN 978 90 272 2370 8 Idioms PASAA Journal of Language Teaching Volume 12 1976 Tony Pastor s 201 Bowery Songster 1867 New York Dick amp Fitzgerald p 9 William Tennessee The Glass Menagerie New Directions 2011 p 1 3 ISBN 978 0 8112 1894 8 Himes Chester All Shot Up 1960 Pegasus 2007 p 101 ISBN 978 1933648729 1 All Musicals lyrics Admin Stereo Stories 6 October 2014 Walking In The Rain by Grace Jones Stereo Stories Retrieved 15 October 2022 Fitzsimons Ross Nightclubbing Hotpress Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2022 Beagle The 16 August 2020 Fifty years on Eric Clapton The Beagle Retrieved 15 October 2022 Programme guide 2earfm Retrieved 15 October 2022 Marillion website LYRICS Heart of Lothian Tripping the Light Fantastic Lit AllMusic Blistein Jon Greta Van Fleet Search for Love Amid War on New Song Heat Above Rolling Stone online February 10 2021 Underground Genius Retrieved 2 October 2023 External links edit Trip the light fantastic at The Phrase Finder website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trip the light fantastic amp oldid 1193877752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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